Most women in America donâ€™t think twice about hopping in their cars and hitting the open road to run errands, pick the kids up from school or simply enjoy a long leisurely drive. However, in Saudi Arabia, women are still banned from driving despite several high profile incidents over the years that has thrust the global mediaâ€™s attention on the issue. This past week the issue was once again brought into the limelight as a female Saudi Arabian citizen took to the wheel and later posted the video on the popular social-networking site YouTube.

With her brother in the passenger seat, 32-year-old Manal al-Sharif, took a short spin that landed her in the slammer. The drive was deliberate as al-Sharif herself revealed in a recent interview in which she lamented her frustration for not being able to find a taxi one night, â€œI had to walk on the street for half an hour looking for a cab. I was harassed by every single car because it was late at night and I was walking alone. I kept calling my brother to pick me up, but his phone wasnâ€™t answering. I was crying in the street. A 32-year-old grown woman, a mother, crying like a kid because I couldnâ€™t find anyone to bring me home.â€ Al-Sharif learned to drive in the United States and holds a driverâ€™s license from America. However, in her homeland, only men are issued driverâ€™s licenses.

According to Saudi Arabian authorities, al- Sharif broke several laws after she got behind the wheel including, â€œbypassing rules and regulations, driving a car within the city, enabling a journalist to interview her while driving a car, deliberately disseminating the incident to the media, incitement of Saudi women to drive cars, and turning public opinion against the regulations.â€ Scores of Saudi citizens have rallied behind al-Sharif and begun to question the veracity of the driving ban on women especially when there is nothing on the books that legally bars a woman from driving.

Soon after her incarceration, a Facebook page was erected entitled â€˜We are all Manal al-Sharif: a call for solidarity with Saudi womenâ€™s rightsâ€™ The page has already garnered 19,000 likes. Another fan page related to the womenâ€™s driving ban in Saudi Arabia is also getting a lot of support, to the tune of 6,000 likes so far, albeit for all of the wrong reasons. The page encourages Saudi Arabian men to beat their female relatives with a heavy brocaded rope known as the â€œIqalâ€, which adorns the Saudi Arabian menâ€™s headdress, should any of the women demand driving rights.

Al-Sharif remains in prison and her fate is yet to be determined. Some analysts have predicted she will stay in prison for five days, however it remains to be seen if she will face further penalties for deliberately flaunting the driving ban. Meanwhile, another Saudi Arabian woman copied al-Sharifâ€™s drive this week and was swiftly arrested at a local supermarket. However, she was only held for a few hours and released.